TRAVEL


World  /  Europe  /  Ireland  /  Belfast  /  The university quarter

Ireland Guide

Belfast

The university quarter

    Address: Just south of Shaftesbury Square

    Website: www.qub.ac.uk/vcentre

    Opening time: Visitor centre Mon– Fri 10am–4pm, May– Sept also Sat same times

    The distinctive steeples of three churches – Moravian, Crescent and Methodist – frame the entrance to the university quarter. From here, leading up to the university buildings, the roads are lined with early Victorian terraces that represent the final flowering of Georgian architecture in Belfast. The Upper Crescent is a magnificent curved Neoclassical terrace, built in about 1845 but sadly neglected since; it is now used mainly for office space. The Lower Crescent, perversely, is straight.

    Queen's University is the architectural centrepiece of the area, flanked by the most satisfying example of a Georgian terrace in Belfast, University Square, where the red brickwork mostly remains intact, with the exception of a few bay windows added in the Victorian era. The university building itself was constructed in 1849 as a mock-Tudor remodelling of Magdalen College, Oxford, to a design by Lanyon, and houses a visitor centre which provides information about the university, hosts a series of art exhibitions as well as a permanent display of Seamus Heaney memorabilia, and runs guided tours (Sat noon; £5; 1hr). Across the road from here is the Students' Union, a white 1960s design. The Italianate Union Theological College, nearby on College Park, also by Lanyon, was temporarily the site of the Northern Ireland Parliament until 1932 when Stormont was built. A little further south down University Road, the university bookshop is especially good for Irish history and politics and has particularly impressive fiction, drama and poetry sections.